Site photos and user needs

A few clear photos plus a short note on who needs access usually make the first entry-system answer much clearer.

Serving Brent, wider NW London, and selected West London postcodes. Send your postcode and 2-4 clear photos for a quick quote.

This guide covers the practical first step for entry-system work. Good photos and a short note on the user need usually do more than a long technical description, because they show the entrance, the current setup and the everyday problem together.

What this usually means

The first check is really about context: what the current entrance looks like, what the user is trying to do, and which part of the setup feels awkward now. That usually tells you faster whether the job belongs with Entry systems, Intercoms, a doorbell page or something broader.

What to send first

  • One wider photo of the entrance, gate or front door.
  • One closer photo of the current panel, release point or indoor point if there is one.
  • A short note on who needs access, what is awkward now and whether this is a home or a small shared building.
  • Any product link, model number or previous replacement idea if you already have one.

What can still change after photos

  • Final hardware fit, release arrangement or the tidiest answer may still need confirming on site.
  • Unknown older equipment, awkward previous work or mixed shared-entrance expectations can widen the scope.
  • If the photos show that the real issue is the resident handset or monitor, Intercoms may be the better place to start.

Need a quick answer on what to send for an entry-system quote?

Send your postcode, 2-4 clear photos, a short description and any product link or model number if it helps.